Most of us (er, them) are motivated by deep excitement. And of course, many corporations are also excited by it as a new way of perceiving the “life cycle of their brands,” and “customer engagement,” and other terms that sound really creepy in the “bad touch” kind of way. But we see all of the possibilities for new ways of engaging with content. Some of us see exciting creative possibilities and some see dollar signs. (I prefer to see both, when possible.)

Engagement. Right there, some people get lost. “You mean there is more than one way to engage with content?” Yes, there is. When you read a book, you’re engaging with that story in a very different way then when it is shown to you in a comic, and when you watch a movie. Your brain is being engaged in different ways to create the narrative.

With a comic book, you are imagining the continuity of time, you are building mental movies out of the storyboard of the comic. The artist provides static visual cues. With a book, you are given the conceptual cues, but all of the sense experience has to be engaged. As such, it is both a deeply rewarding form of taking in media, because so much of the creative process is left up to you, and a very difficult one in terms of generating engagement, because it isn’t a passive process. (“Why People Don’t Read.”)

With a novel, there is a high entrance price, a potentially high payoff. Movies are a passive process where visual, temporal, auditory cues are provided. Boredom is a potential enemy in all cases, but since there’s a larger investment in reading a book, it seems to follow that if you get more than halfway through a book, you’ve already invested so much in creating that experience that you will insist on seeing it through to the end. It’s very easy to switch channels on the TV, or surf away through YouTube or Netflix. Commitment seems to be so low on a platform like YouTube that it can be hard to keep attention for as “much” as two minutes.

Regardless of format, all of these are blueprints for an experience. Of course, there’s a dark potential in transmedia that the conspiracy theorists have also latched onto, producing a sort of paranoid PR-wing to the transmedia movement. I can’t say if this paranoia is well placed or not, because it is based around things that haven’t happened yet. (Maybe.) Can’t see the ominous implication of transmedia? The fears engaged here are what drive the plot of the movie, “The Game.”

Namely, if transmedia is a way of telling related narratives across multiple mediums, it becomes increasingly immersive for an audience that invests the energy to read a book, watch a movie, and even interact with the characters in the story, and one another within the context or narrative created by the story.

As a creative obsessive, I see this as a good thing. And I see projects experimenting with the possibilities. For example:

CFG is a participatory drama that will play out this summer, with a cast of more than 400 spread over five countries. The plot centres around a secret society whose aim is to change the world; the society has decided to go public andCFG is the recruitment campaign. The narrative will be played out over web videos, interactive puzzles (including clues hidden inside real MP3s such as tracks on the White Album by The Beatles), mobile apps and real-life events. The project is sponsored by Nokia, and a website went live on May 17. This features a video from Tim Kring, who asks visitors to participate in a movement to drive real-world change through interactive storytelling.

The creative team at The company P, Sandberg’s transmedia production business, staged several tests last winter and spring. The Stockholm event ironed out kinks in the mobile technology used. More importantly, it honed the team’s storytelling. “We learned how to spread people out so as to have the sense of being at the mercy of a big adventure.”

This approach would lend us toward long-running projects, projects that can span entire careers, where each item is unique and essentially stand alone, but mythically related to the others.

If you look at the long-running history of Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, or any other religion, you see a multi-generational transmedia story in effect. Many of those stories have real flesh and blood body counts. That’s the side of transmedia that is troubling to most, where we become so immersed in our stories that we kill one another for them. Fact or fiction? You decide.

I hope this short piece has helped you think about media in a new way. Whatever term we use — “transmedia” is a fine one, don’t get me wrong — it is most important from here to look forward and ask “how can these tools be used to produce something beneficial to ourselves and the world?”

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That did feel kind bad touch-y didn’t it? Creating more compelling and hypnotizing ways to draw people into fantasy worlds, and completely alienated from any kind of reality.

Anarchy Pony

That did feel kind bad touch-y didn’t it? Creating more compelling and hypnotizing ways to draw people into fantasy worlds, and completely alienated from any kind of reality.

http://www.ContraControl.com/ Zenc

Yeah, I really like that “Dancing with the Stars” with Chaz Bono in it.

That’s what we’re talking about, right?

http://www.ContraControl.com/ Zenc

Yeah, I really like that “Dancing with the Stars” with Chaz Bono in it.

That’s what we’re talking about, right?

Jay O’Conner

No @Zenc however if Chaz came out with a companion Video Game, Book, Movie, Iphone, Android App then yes.

http://buzzcoastin.posterous.com BuzzCoastin

The simulacrum is not that which hides the truth, but that which hides the absence of truth.
Jean Baudrillard

BuzzCoastin

The simulacrum is not that which hides the truth, but that which hides the absence of truth.
Jean Baudrillard

Jay O’Conner

No @Zenc however if Chaz came out with a companion Video Game, Book, Movie, Iphone, Android App then yes.

Jay O’Conner

No @Zenc however if Chaz came out with a companion Video Game, Book, Movie, Iphone, Android App then yes.

Okarin

sounds like cyberpunk with a corporate logo

Okarin

sounds like cyberpunk with a corporate logo

Jamie Lee

There’s no need for there to be anything corporate about it, it’s just a paradigm for looking at media that crosses format and genre. Of course, corporations are jumping all over it, but truth be told, there is a lot of argument about what metric corps could use to track user involvement to determine if their investment is worthwhile. Which is absurd since it’s not like television advertisement has a REAL metric of that sort.

http://www.facebook.com/agent139 Jamie Lee

There’s no need for there to be anything corporate about it, it’s just a paradigm for looking at media that crosses format and genre. Of course, corporations are jumping all over it, but truth be told, there is a lot of argument about what metric corps could use to track user involvement to determine if their investment is worthwhile. Which is absurd since it’s not like television advertisement has a REAL metric of that sort.